[Infowarrior] - In Montana, Casting A Web for Terrorists
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Sun Jun 4 12:45:28 EDT 2006
In Montana, Casting A Web for Terrorists
Online Sleuth Hunts Down Suspects Worldwide
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/03/AR2006060300
530_pf.html
By Blaine Harden
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 4, 2006; A03
HELENA, Mont. -- Like a hunter using a duck call, Shannen Rossmiller invites
the online attentions of would-be terrorists by adorning her e-mail with
video clips of Westerners getting their heads cut off.
"They get pumped up when they see beheadings. For them, it's like rock
videos," Rossmiller said. "I always give the appearance that I am one of
them."
Appearances deceive. At her Montana high school, Rossmiller was a
cheerleader -- a farm girl whose slight frame meant she was the one hoisted
to the top of the human pyramid. Now 35, she is a mother of three, a
part-time paralegal and a $23,000-a-year municipal court judge in a town
north of here.
Since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, she has found herself an unpaid night
job. She uses the Internet to find terrorism suspects, she said, hunting for
them while her family sleeps, spending the hours between 3 a.m. and dawn at
her home computer. Her husband, Randy, a wireless network technician, keeps
eight computers and two broadband systems working in their house.
Posing as an al-Qaeda operative, she has helped federal agents set up stings
that have netted two Americans -- a Washington state National Guardsman
convicted in 2004 of attempted espionage, and a Pennsylvania man who
prosecutors say sought to blow up oil installations in the United States.
Rossmiller was a key prosecution witness against the Guardsman, who is
serving a life sentence, and said she has been told she will be called as a
witness in the Pennsylvania case.
Most of Rossmiller's terrorist tracking, though, has focused on foreign
suspects, she said. By her count, she has turned over to federal
investigators about 60 "packages" of information on suspects outside the
United States.
She provided The Washington Post with hundreds of pages of e-mail exchanges
that she said are transcripts of her conversations with would-be jihadists
outside this country. Rossmiller said she meets nearly every week with U.S.
intelligence contacts in Montana, and that they have periodically given her
feedback about the usefulness of her information. She said she has been told
that foreign intelligence officers have detained more than a dozen
individuals whom she helped identify.
But while Rossmiller has been vital in uncovering two cases of domestic
terrorism, it is not clear how extensive a role she has played in the global
fight against terrorism. Federal intelligence sources confirmed that for
several years she has provided the FBI and the CIA with useful information,
but refused to characterize it or say how it has been used. Her assertions
about detentions of foreign suspects could not be independently confirmed,
and officials from the FBI and CIA declined to speak publicly about her.
Still, the outspoken small-town judge raises the remarkable reality of the
government regularly using a self-appointed, self-trained Internet sleuth to
help fight terrorism at home and abroad. Given several chances to do so, no
one in the intelligence community characterized Rossmiller as a crank.
Indeed, protecting Rossmiller and her family in their rural Montana home,
not far from the Canadian border, has for two years been a regular agenda
item at meetings between local police, the FBI and U.S. Border Patrol
agents, according to a Montana law enforcement official who requested
anonymity.
Rossmiller said she is disappointed that federal agencies will not go on the
record to confirm the details she offers about the nature and extent of her
online work. "For the life of me, I can't understand what the deal is with
higher-ups in the FBI," she said.
Rossmiller's night job became public knowledge in 2004, when she testified
against Spec. Ryan G. Anderson, who was part of a National Guard tank crew
based at Fort Lewis, Wash.
Rossmiller said she spotted him Oct. 6, 2003, when he appeared, writing in
English, on an Arabic Internet forum. She apparently convinced him she was a
member of al-Qaeda and he wrote back, asking: "Just, curious, would there be
any chance a brother who might be on the wrong side at the present, could
join up defect so to speak?"
Anderson was arrested six days before his unit was deployed to Iraq.
Rossmiller was a key witness at his court-martial, during which one of her
e-mail identities was published in newspapers. Within hours, she said, a man
with a Middle Eastern accent called the Montana courthouse where she works
and asked for her address.
She and her husband have since obtained permits to carry concealed weapons.
She sometimes carries a .38-caliber pistol in her purse. Although her home
town has been named in previous articles about her, she asked that it not be
printed in this one.
In February, she was again identified in court documents after she posed
online as an al-Qaeda operative and offered money to Michael Curtis
Reynolds, who a U.S. attorney in Pennsylvania has said is suspected of
plotting to blow up oil and gas pipelines.
Rossmiller snared the two American terrorism suspects, she said, while
casting Internet hooks for bigger fish: Arabic-speaking extremists in the
Middle East and in Pakistan. To find them, she said she has invented a cast
of male online characters. They hold court -- spitting insults at "dirty
Americans" and distributing videos of beheadings -- on several Islamic Web
sites, according to transcripts of her e-mail exchanges.
Using those personas, Rossmiller said she strikes up conversations with
chatty extremists. Rossmiller said she communicates primarily in Arabic,
which she began learning after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. She also uses a
computer translation program and said the FBI has occasionally provided her
with a native Arabic speaker.
As part of her online approach, she offers arms and money to fight in Iraq
and to kill "slaves of the cross." She said her work led to the detention
last year of several men training to enter Iraq to fight U.S. troops, as
well as to the arrest of a Middle Eastern academic seeking al-Qaeda funding
for his plans to build a nuclear bomb. Federal agencies declined to comment
on both cases.
Rossmiller said that "2005 was a very productive year for me."
Why is Rossmiller talking about terrorist hunting that has not been made
public in court?
"With the Reynolds case coming up, it is important that people understand
what I do," she said during two long conversations in a Perkins pancake
house here. "I don't work for the FBI, the CIA, Mossad or any of those
folks. It wouldn't make me feel right to be on a payroll."
Rossmiller is angry that some news reports have portrayed her merely as a
"Montana mom."
"I am so upset about the press presenting me as this stupid little blonde
woman patrolling the Internet," she said.
After four years of watching the Bush administration's efforts against
terrorism, Rossmiller said her commitment to finding enemies of the United
States is stronger than ever and that she continues to track suspects in the
middle of the night. "She doesn't have normal sleep patterns, never has,"
her husband said.
Rossmiller's online experience, though, has soured her on many of the
methods of the Bush administration's fight against terrorism. She said that
the invasion of Iraq and the use of harsh interrogation techniques has
increased the number of people in the Arab world who hate the United States.
"It has created more discord, and the numbers of brothers interested in
violence have grown," she said.
Rossmiller has a knack for the minutiae and theatrics of wooing extremists
over the Internet, according to Brent Astley, a Canadian software developer
and executive director of a group of online volunteers who try to identify
terrorism suspects and turn them over to authorities.
"She was one of the first, and she is definitely one of the best," said
Astley, who in 2002 helped set up Rossmiller with software that hides her
computer address in Montana and allows her to appear online as if she lives
in Pakistan or elsewhere.
Astley said her particular gift is for "cyber-theatrics."
"She has chutzpah, and that is definitely required," he said.
One of Rossmiller's strategies is to warn jihadists that they are risking
the lives of their Islamic brothers by speaking too candidly online.
She calls her Arabic skills "workable." In 2002, she took an eight-week,
online Arabic course. Later that year, she went to Buffalo for a two-week
course that focused on grammar. But when it comes to online deception,
perfect Arabic does not matter much, Astley said. "A lot of the people that
are being dealt with are not the cream of educated society," he said.
Rossmiller said she has been told she will be called to testify later this
year against Reynolds, the unemployed man from Wilkes-Barre, Pa., who was
arrested late last year near Pocatello, Idaho, and who a federal prosecutor
has said was attempting to "provide material aid to al-Qaeda."
As for the foreign terrorism suspects she says she has identified,
Rossmiller said she does not know what has happened to them, other than that
some have been detained.
"I don't know what they do with these guys," she said. "And I don't want to
know."
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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